The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, April 04, 1922, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    THE ALLIANCE HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1D22
OttUER DE FmULAY
WILL HOLD FIRST
SPRING REUNION
FRIDAY, APRIL 7, IS
THE DATE.
SET AS
Zoro D. Clark of Omaha to De Here
for Occasion Local lloys to
Institute Sidney Chapter.
The Alliance chapter of the Order of
DcMolay, the Masonic fraternity for
boys, will hold iU first spring reunion
on Friday evening of this week at the
Masonic Temple, at which t.me it is
expected that a class of six boys
will he initiated. The two decree.
of the order will be exemplified, the
degree work starting promptly at 7
p. m.
All members of the Masonic frater
nity are invited to le present for the
initiation, which will be under the
supervision of Dr. Zoro D. Clark, 33,
of Omaha. Dr. Clark is the member ot
the grand council of De Molay for
Nebraska. The order is sponsoied by
Alliance chapter of Uo.se Croix, Scot
tish Kite Masons. The Alliance chap
ter was instituted a little over a year
ngo by Dr. Clark, and was one of the
Jirst in the state. Dr. Clark will in
spect the chapter and will make lec
ommendations as to whether it should
be given a permanent chapter. It is
now operating under letters temporary.
Following the degree work, there
will be a banquet at the Allinace hotel
l'alm Koom. Dr. Clark Is on his way
to Sidney, where a chapter of the
cider will be instituted. He will take
with him a degree team from the Alli
ance chapter, and they will leave Im
mediately after the dinner at the Palm
Koom.
The following members of the local
Pe Molay chapter will make the trip
with Dr. Clark: Wray Kominger.
Icon Alter, Fred Purdy, ltaymond
1ewis, Lee Strong, Rowland Threlkeld,
Fred Stilwul, Ollie Mcrherson, frank
Hunt. Seth Joder, Ieslio Miskimen
King Robbins, Sterling Harris, Arthur
Sheoherd. Cecil Heal, Kalph Uarvin
Carl Sward. Philliu Killian and George
l'urdy. Several memler8 of the De
Molay, as well as interested Masons,
will accompany the team to aiuney.
RAILROAD MEN AND
FARMERS HOLD MEETING
( Continued from Pacre IA
stated that the farmers and railroad
men are now getting together and that
they will put their men in congress
this fall, predicting that Texas will put
sixtM'n congressmen there lor tne la
bor element. He stated that "they
have rotten the farmer down to hi
B. V. D.'s and they want to get us
in the same fix. He said "the work
ing man and the farmer will go to
the polls together and cast their vote
jor men ami not, ior pouuuu p.uuv.
The first duty of the citizen today, he
Kiiid. is to care for his family. He
closed with "The Achievement of La
Lor."
The Achievement of Labor
There is dignity In toil in toil of
the hands as v eil as tod of the head
in toil to provide ior the bodily wants
of an individual life, as well us in toil
to promote some enterprise of world
vide fame. All labor that tends to
supply man's wants, to increase man';
happiness, to elevate man s nature
in a word, all lalor that is honest
is honorable. Labor clears the forest
and drains the morass, and makes th
"wilderness rejoice and blossom like
the roe.
I,ubor drives the plow, and scat
Urs the seed ami reaps the harvest
and grinds the corn and converts it
into bread, the stair of life. Labor
tending the pastures anil sweeping th
waters, as well as cultivating the soil
I'l ovides with daily sustenance the 110
millions of the family of man. Labor
jsruthers the cossamer web of the cat
r miliar, the cotton from the held, and
the tleoce fiom the flock, and weaves l
into raiment soft and warm and beau
tiful. the purple rob a of the prince and
the gray gown of the peasant being
aliUc in iU handiwork.
libor molds the brick, and split
the slats, and ouurrie the stone and
shapes the column, and reus not only
the humble cottage, but the gorgeous
palace, ana Uie iaiermg spire ana nit
stately dome. Ithor, driving deep into
the e olid earth, brings up its long hid
den veins of coal to feed one hundred
thousand furnaces ind in millions of
homes to defy the winter's cold. La
bor smelts the iron, and moulds it into
a thousand shajes for use and orna
ment, from the massive pillar to the
tiniest needle, from the ponderous an
chor to the wire gauze, from the migh
tv flywheel of the steum engine to the
iKjlisheU purse-ring or the glittering
bead.
Labor hews down the gnarled oak
nnd shapes the timbers and builds the
ship, ur. iruides it over the deep,
n.1 : the hu'v wheel whirls lound:
.he town rpper.rs; the temple of' re-j
uion leais us lolly nont; a toiet, .
s mast l c from the !ihi d r. "ii I
very side pre heard the fojti Is ti in-
lu-try and irladness.
Labor achieves grander victcne.--, it
weaves more durable trophic--, it holds
wider sway than its conqueror, his
name Incomes tainted -ind hi M Hut
ments crumble, but labor converts his
red battle, fields into garden;-, and
( t simiheant of telter thin-rs.
With hand on throttle valve an I face
red with the furnace plow, lai.or feeds
end guides the black cavalry of com
merce as w th steam-necked nanus
they thunder up the mountain side or
scream across the plain. On foum
crested seas, In golden harvest fields,
amid the din of factories and tne roar
of forges, everywhere, it is the dews
of toil alone that nurture a natnn
from poverty to affluence.
Shall not the toilers come to xneir
own? Shall not crowns nnd castes
be aba ed lefore them, and oppression
and Injustice and greed lose their
ower? ho shall louit .1 v. nen
amid the howling storm the mariner,
sailing over tropic seas, waits for re-
lef from his weary watch, he turns ms
ves toward the Southern Cros ruin
ing luridly above the tempest vexed
ocean, the whirling worlds charge
their n aces, with starry linger r.onts
the Almighty marks his pissane of
lme unon the dial of lh universe, and
though no bell may beat he glud tid
ings, the lookout knows that the mid
night is well nigh p:vt, and relief and
rest are close at hand. Let labor eve) y-
where take heart of u p!, .he Cross
is bending, the midnight is passing and
"joy cometh with the morning. '
MUSIC MEMORY CONTEST
FOR THE CITY SCHOOLS
( Continued from page 1)
appreciated assistance are Mann's Or
chestra, Mrs. Fosdick's Junior Orches
tra, Mrs. R. T. Beal, II. V. Shellen
berger, Leon Alter, Tom Bass, Girls'
Glee club and Boys' Glee club of the
high school.
In Friday s issue will be published
the names of the winners at the pre
liminary' contest; also, either letters
or cuttings from compositions written
by these pupils, showing their attitude
towards the story.
A music memory contest, while in
ts infancy, to some extent, in many
localities, is no longer a novelty. In
no way can the study of the "worth
while In music" be brought so vividly
to the attention of all pupils, as
through the medium of such a test.
Following is the list of contest com
positions:
Star Spangled Banner, Francis Scott
Key, John Smith.
Old i oiks at Home, Stephen C. os-
ter.
Old Black Joe, Stephen C. Foster.
The Rosary, Elhelbert Nevin.
Narcissus, Ethclbert Nevin.
Oloba Oe, Queen Liliuokalani.
Barcarolle, (Tales of Hoffman),
OHerbach.
Humoresque, Dvorak.
'Anvil Chorus, (II Trovatore), Verdi.
Quartette from Rigoletto, Verdi.
Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes,
Unknown. Words John Howard
Payne.
Mor Sweet Home, Bishop.
Lo, Hear the Gentle Lark, Bishop,
'l rauiiierei, Schumann.
Melody in F, Rubinstein
Sextette from Lucia, Donizetti.
Lead Kindly Light, John Henry
Newman.
William Tell Overture, Rossini.
From the Land of the Sky Blue
Water, Cadman.
Minuet in G, Beethoven.
The Dvinp Poet, Gottschalk.
The Last Hope, Gottschalk.
Serenade, Schubert.
Stars and Stripes Forever, John
Philip Sousa.
Dixie, Emmett.
America, S. F. Smith.
New Lines Comiug in Every Day New Snappy Styles
Quality's more impor
tant than price
T'S the fine quality in
clothes that gives you
the long wear; that keeps
the style looking right
We know it So we wont
sell anything else
If you knew ity ou would
not buy anything else
Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes
are priced fust high enough to
give you the best; that makes
them cost less, because fine
quality wears longest
Famous One Price Clothing House
v 20 Years of the Utmost in Clothing Satisfaction
Someone Wins SI 00 By Finding the Most Words in This
Picture Beginning With the Letter "P"
WHY NOT MAKE IT YOU?
iilu"?
irouuh tli billows, and
wrestling with the tempest, to bear to
our shores the produce of every clime.
l.nhnr launrhing at difficulties, spans
poajestic rivers, carries viadilcts over
nun mi y swanps, suspends bridges over
!eep ravines, pierces the solid moun
tain with the dark tunnel, blasting
rock3 and filling hollows, and while
linking together with its iron grasp
all nations of the earth, verifying, in
a literal sense, the ancient prophecy,
"I' viiIIpv khall w exnltvl and
t;vcry mountain and hill sliall be'
brought low."
Labor draws forth its delicate iron'
thi end, and stretching it from city to
citv, from province, through mountains
nnd beneath the sea, realizes more
than fancy ever fabled, while it con
structs a chariot on which speech may
outstrip the wind, nnd compete with
lightning, for the telegraph flies as
rapidly as thought itself. Labor, the
mighty magician, walks forth in a
legion uninhabitated and waste; he
look -5 earnestly at the scene, so quiet
in its desolation, then waving his
vonuer-working wand, those dreary
vallcvs with golden harvest; tho.-e bar
ren inountain-slope3 are clothed with
foliage; the furnace Mazes; the anvil
4 CCPYKJHTZO
CONTEST CLOSES APRIL 10 TH. CoPyrl8ht. 1922. Tribune Printing Co. Wlllmar, Klr
Just 6 Days Left Read About It On Page 4